
The day after the locks were changed, I posted a message in the company-wide Slack channel. “If anyone needs a spare key to the penthouse, please come see me directly.” When my phone screen lit up, I was staring blankly at the steaming water in the clawfoot tub, precisely 98 degrees. The message from the intern felt like a needle pressed into my pupil. “Hey Oliver, Serena actually gave me a spare key a few days ago. She said it would make things more efficient.” Efficient? The corner of my mouth twitched. My gaze drifted to the bowl of slow-simmered beef consommé on the nightstand, still radiating a faint warmth. My mind kept looping back to that strand of chestnut hair I’d found caught in the shower drain this morning. Coarse, wavy—entirely different from my own straight, ink-black hair. The mystery of the missing spare key from the entryway console finally had an answer. Last night, when Serena told me she’d lost her set, the sizzle of the steak in the kitchen had drowned out my doubt. She always used the keypad. Now, I realized her casual "I lost them" had been as calculated and light as a feather. I hung my suit jacket on the mahogany valet, watching my shadow stretch long across the hardwood floor. On the brass key rack, the silver fob was indeed gone. … The moment Serena walked through the door, her face was a mask of cold fury. “Oliver, have you lost your mind? What the hell was that message in the Slack channel? Do you have any idea what people are saying about him now?” I set the soup spoon down and looked at her, my gaze unwavering. “Why did you lie to me about losing the keys?” She froze. After a long beat, she exhaled, her voice dropping an octave into a deceptive softness. “Milo is my personal assistant, Oliver. Giving him a key was about logistics, nothing more. I only told you I lost them because I didn’t want you overthinking things. Are you really going to be this reactive?” I was silent for a few seconds. When I spoke, my voice was a raspy ghost of itself. “Should I just give him my set too, then?” “Oliver!” Serena’s voice sharpened, hitting the ceiling. “Milo left the office in tears this afternoon. He’s my employee, period. Can you please stop being so paranoid?” “Then how do you explain the handprints on the glass in the steam shower?” “What handprints?” I grabbed her hand and led her toward the master bath, pointing at the glass partition. But the surface was pristine. Empty. Serena wrenched her hand away, letting out a sharp, mocking breath. “I’m not doing this with you. Don’t let it happen again. Go fix your head.” Ten minutes later, I was removed from the company Slack. A notification popped up on my phone: my position as the "Executive Liaison"—a title she’d given me to justify my presence in her life—had been terminated. The grayed-out group icon and the termination notice felt like two successive slaps across the face. My skin burned. The aroma of the beef consommé drifted from the kitchen, but suddenly, it made my stomach turn. Two thousand, four hundred and eighty-five days. I was still waiting for the marriage certificate she had promised me years ago. Instead, I got a front-row seat to her publicly defending another man. My mind drifted back to the year my father jumped from his office window and my mother vanished into the night. Serena had been the one to hold me, her eyes red with a fierce vow. “Listen to me, Oliver. Even if the whole world turns its back on you, you have me. I can’t be a surgeon anymore, but I can sell the tech. I can build us a home. We’ll have a balcony full of flowers—you’ll plant hydrangeas, I’ll keep the succulents. We’ll have a life. A real one.” Back then, my heart ached with a gratitude so deep it was indistinguishable from love. I couldn’t say no to the woman who had lost the dexterity in her hands—the hands of a prodigy surgeon—saving me from that car wreck. So I stayed. I transformed from a concert pianist with a promising career into her high-end housekeeper, her personal chef, her shadow. Massages, gourmet meals, managing her social calendar—my entire existence was filtered through Serena. My mother hadn't understood. “Is it worth throwing away your life’s ambition for her?” I had been so certain when I answered. But now, looking at Serena’s beautiful, increasingly distant face under the warm glow of the chandelier, I realized I had been catastrophically wrong. We settled into a cold war. She stopped coming home, though I still had the driver deliver her meals like clockwork. Meanwhile, Milo’s Instagram became a broadcast of my displacement. He posted a photo of the executive lounge door; a pair of black leather slippers sat by the threshold. They weren't my size, and they certainly weren't Serena’s style. Then came a photo of a new set of stoneware soup bowls—dark, masculine, nothing like the ones Serena usually preferred. In the photo, they were sharing a meal, their blurred reflections caught in the window, smiling at each other. Milo’s caption read: “Hearty soup with my favorite person. Some vintage relics are just meant to be replaced.” I had spent four hours slow-roasting the bones for that soup. The bowl they’d discarded was part of a set I’d bought her seven years ago for our first anniversary. The comments were a bloodbath of subtext. “Is the CEO finally trading up? This looks like a much better match than the last one.” Serena didn’t argue. She simply "liked" the comment. In the warmth of our living room, with the central heating humming perfectly, I felt a bone-deep chill. It was that casual, effortless "like" that did it. Seven years of giving everything I was, and I was just a "vintage relic" in the eyes of others, and a "previous model" to her. A notification pinged. Milo had tagged me in a post. “Oliver, I’m so sorry about the misunderstanding! I accidentally spilled something on my shirt the other day and had to use your shower. Please don’t be hard on Serena because of me.” “Serena said she’s added my biometrics to the smart-lock system now, so I don't have to bother you for keys anymore...” followed by a smug emoji. He had every reason to be smug. On the surface, it was an apology. In reality, it was a flag planted in my territory, letting everyone know whose side Serena was on. A mutual friend commented: “Is this an apology or a victory lap? Serena, you’re really letting this slide?” Another replied: “Let it slide? Can’t you see the ‘Mr. CEO’ position is up for grabs?” Serena remained silent in the threads, but under the comment about "replacing the man of the house," she posted a single smiling face. I stared at the screen until my eyes blurred with a stinging heat. I exited the app, opened the smart-home security settings, and deleted my own fingerprint from the system. I left only hers and his. Serena wanted to swap me out. And frankly, I was tired of being the help. That night, Serena finally came home. Her expression was neutral, but her eyes held a strange, bright intensity. She thrust a vintage leather-bound book of sheet music into my lap. “I told you I’d find this for you. Keep it.” She pushed me gently onto the sofa and sat down at the Steinway in the corner. Her back was to me, her shoulders hunched as she clumsily hunted for the notes with her scarred hands. If this had been a month ago, I would have been like Milo—I would have taken a photo and captioned it: “She’s trying so hard just to make me smile!” But now, I just asked quietly, “When did it start?” The piano went silent. Serena turned around, her brow furrowed into a tight knot. “I explained it. I even humbled myself to apologize. Oliver, what more do you want?” I looked her straight in the eyes. “There’s a pair of men’s slippers in your office. A new bottle of cologne in your gym bag. A high-end gaming console in the guest room. And the drawer in the nightstand? It’s full of a brand of protection we’ve never used. Your closet—” “Enough!” The silence that followed was deafening, filled only by our jagged breathing. Serena stood up after a few seconds. The sheet music was crumpled in her grip, her knuckles white. She looked at me with a cold, condescending disappointment. “Oliver, I’m starting to wonder if your father’s instability was genetic. What’s next? Are you going to threaten to jump off a balcony to guilt me?” “Like your father did when he found out your mother was leaving?” The words hit me like a physical explosion. My heart felt like it had been ripped open. I expected her to argue, to deny, to lie. I never imagined she would reach into my chest and twist the oldest, rawest scar I had. “In the adult world, we don't say everything out loud. It’s called grace,” she said, her voice icy. “Whatever I do outside this house doesn't change the fact that you were always going to be the man I married. I ruined my hands for you. I gave up being a surgeon for you. What else could you possibly want?” “Milo using the shower was a lapse in judgment, fine. He apologized. Let it go. Stop acting like a martyr.” The louder she spoke, the more clinical her gaze became. She framed it as if I were the one being unfaithful, the one being unreasonable. I looked at her and realized she wasn't hiding out of guilt. She was acting out of the absolute certainty that I had nowhere else to go. She believed she owned me because I was "broken" without her. My throat felt constricted. I didn't say another word. She remembered her ruined hands. She remembered her lost career. But she had conveniently forgotten that I had ruined my own hands too—not in a crash, but in the slow, agonizing death of a thousand chores, tending to her every whim until my technique was a memory. After she retreated to the bedroom, I sat at the piano. I pressed a key, then another. The notes were there, but the soul was gone. Later that night, I heard the front door click. Serena had slipped out. I opened my eyes in the dark. A few minutes later, Milo posted again. Five photos. Each one showed a drone-light display over the city skyline. Together, they spelled out: “SERENA LOVES MILO.” I had seen that same display three years ago. It was the night Serena’s company went public. She had given me the deed to the penthouse and a balcony filled with roses, peonies, and succulents. She had yelled into the night: “I kept my promise, Oliver! I’ll love you forever!” The woman was the same. The recipient had changed. My phone vibrated. A text from my mother. I turned off the phone, pulled my suitcase from under the bed, and began to pack. My clothes went in first. Everything else—the gifts, the mementos—went into the trash. When Serena returned the next morning, she saw the suitcase by the door. She loosened her silk tie, a mocking smirk playing on her lips. “And where do you think you’re going?” “On a trip.” “A trip?” She laughed as if I’d told a joke. “You’ve waited on me hand and foot for seven years. You haven't spent a single night away from this house. You think you can just leave?” “Oliver, if this is some play to make me crawl back to you, it won't work.” “I don't think I’m in the wrong here, and I don't think I’ve done anything wrong with Milo. I’ve supported you for seven years. It’s time you grew up.” I didn't argue. I didn't even look at her. I just tucked the suitcase back into the closet for now. It felt light—empty, almost. Just like the house I’d lived in for seven years, and the marriage I’d been waiting for. I thought it was a sanctuary; it was just a cage. Serena nodded, satisfied. “Good. You’re learning.” “Nobody else in this world is going to give you a home like this, Oliver. You should be grateful for what you have.” Her words were cold, punctuated by the faint scent of a strawberry-flavored vape—Milo’s brand—clinging to her hair. My heart gave one last, dull throb of pain. “Just remember, you aren't that shining star on the stage anymore. You’re just my domestic partner. A man who’s lost his edge. Stay quiet, stay obedient, and I’ll keep taking care of you...” Her voice drifted off as she turned on the shower. I couldn't hear the rest, but I’d heard enough. I smiled to myself. She didn't know that my passport and essentials were already in that bag. I wasn't staying because I was "grateful." I was staying because my flight wasn't until the day after tomorrow. The next day, Serena called me—a rarity. Her voice was uncharacteristically soft. “The annual gala is tonight. The board and the investors all want to finally meet you.” She let out a small, flirtatious laugh. “Come. Use the opportunity. Propose to me in front of them. Let’s make it official.” My heart skipped a beat, then went flat. No excitement. No joy. But I agreed. Not because I had hope. But because after seven years of giving her my soul, I wanted a definitive ending. That evening, she sent a courier with a gift. A vintage-style leather watch strap and a tailored black tuxedo. My favorite color. My exact size. A ghost of warmth flickered in my chest. When the double doors of the ballroom opened and I walked toward the center of the room, I froze. In the center of the gala floor, on a platform draped in white orchids, stood Serena. She was wearing a stunning black diamond-encrusted gown and a sapphire pendant. And Milo was there, down on one knee, holding a ring box. The flashes of the cameras were blinding. The roar of congratulations felt like a tidal wave crashing over me. I should have been devastated. But I wasn't. I just felt a profound sense of "of course." Seeing me, Serena stepped off the platform and hurried over. She kept her voice low, urgent. “This proposal is just for show, Oliver. It’s for Milo’s birthday wish. He needs a 'best man' to stand with him for the photos. Just play along for tonight. I’ll explain everything when we get home.” She didn't even realize how insane she sounded. She shoved me toward the platform, positioning me right next to Milo. And so, I stood there. The actual partner of seven years, forcing a smile for the cameras. I watched the woman I loved take the engagement ring I had picked out months ago and let another man slide it onto her finger. I watched them gaze into each other’s eyes. I watched them embrace and kiss while the room erupted in applause. I had dreamed of this moment. In my dreams, I was the one holding the ring. In reality, I was the prop. During the cocktail hour, Milo followed Serena around with a glass of custom-made ginger-infused water. It was my recipe—the one I’d perfected after dozens of tries to help with her chronic migraines. “You’ll be my ‘Water Man’ forever, won't you?” she had once joked. Now, she’d given that recipe to him too. “The CEO and Mr. Milo are a match made in heaven,” a guest toasted. “I bet we’ll hear wedding bells and see a baby within a year.” “From your lips to God’s ears,” Serena laughed, raising her glass. Milo looked at me, his grin widening with triumph. He leaned in close under the cover of the noise. “Oliver, the proposal you waited seven years for? I got it with one little lie. You’re just as pathetic as your deadbeat dad. Why don't you do the world a favor and follow in his footsteps?” His voice was low, but loud enough for Serena to hear. A few guests nearby went silent. Serena just sipped her wine, her eyes darting away, pretending she hadn't heard a thing. I picked up a glass of red wine from a passing tray. I took a slow sip, then threw the rest of the glass directly into Milo’s smiling face. The room went dead silent. I turned to Serena. “Why did you really bring me here? To be a groomsman? To pass a loyalty test? Or just to be the punchline for your friends?” Serena’s face flushed with anger. “Oliver! I explained this to you! What the hell is wrong with you?” She stepped in front of Milo, shielding him. I didn't look at her. “Whatever it was, you got what you wanted,” I said, my voice eerily calm. “Serena, we’re done.”
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